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Dive into the research topics where Rema Krishnaswamy is active.

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Featured researches published by Rema Krishnaswamy.


Soft Matter | 2013

Yield stress, thixotropy and shear banding in a dilute aqueous suspension of few layer graphene oxide platelets

K. S. Vasu; Rema Krishnaswamy; S. Sampath; A. K. Sood

We demonstrate a rigidity percolation transition and the onset of yield stress in a dilute aqueous dispersion of graphene oxide platelets (aspect ratio ∼5000) above a critical volume fraction of 3.75 × 10−4 with a percolation exponent of 2.4 ± 0.1. The viscoelastic moduli of the gel at rest measured as a function of time indicate the absence of structural evolution of the 3D percolated network of disks. However a shear-induced aging giving rise to a compact jammed state and shear rejuvenation indicating a homogenous flow is observed when a steady shear stress (σ) is imposed in creep experiments. We construct a shear diagram (σ vs. volume fraction ϕ) and the critical stress above which shear rejuvenation occurs is identified as the yield stress σy of the gel. The minimum steady state shear rate m obtained from creep experiments agrees well with the end of the plateau region in a controlled shear rate flow curve, indicating a shear localization below m. A steady state shear banding in the plateau region of the flow curve observed in particle velocimetry measurements in a Couette geometry confirms that the dilute suspensions of GO platelets form a thixotropic yield stress fluid.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2010

Growth, self-assembly and dynamics of nano-scale films at fluid interfaces

Rema Krishnaswamy; A. K. Sood

Ultrathin films at fluid interfaces are important not only from a fundamental point of view as 2D complex fluids but have also become increasingly relevant in the development of novel functional materials. There has been an explosion in the synthesis work in this area over the last decade, giving rise to many exotic nanostructures at fluid interfaces. However, the factors controlling particle nucleation, growth and self-assembly at interfaces are poorly understood on a quantitative level. We will outline some of the recent attempts in this direction. Some of the selected investigations examining the macroscopic mechanical properties of molecular and particulate films at fluid interfaces will be reviewed. We conclude with a discussion of the electronic properties of these films that have potential technological and biological applications.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Viscoelastic Behavior of Human Lamin A Proteins in the Context of Dilated Cardiomyopathy

Avinanda Banerjee; Vikram Rathee; Rema Krishnaswamy; Pritha Bhattacharjee; Pulak Ray; A. K. Sood; Kaushik Sengupta

Lamins are intermediate filament proteins of type V constituting a nuclear lamina or filamentous meshwork which lines the nucleoplasmic side of the inner nuclear membrane. This protein mesh provides a supporting scaffold for the nuclear envelope and tethers interphase chromosome to the nuclear periphery. Mutations of mainly A-type lamins are found to be causative for at least 11 human diseases collectively termed as laminopathies majority of which are characterised by aberrant nuclei with altered structural rigidity, deformability and poor mechanotransduction behaviour. But the investigation of viscoelastic behavior of lamin A continues to elude the field. In order to address this problem, we hereby present the very first report on viscoelastic properties of wild type human lamin A and some of its mutants linked with Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) using quantitative rheological measurements. We observed a dramatic strain-softening effect on lamin A network as an outcome of the strain amplitude sweep measurements which could arise from the large compliance of the quasi-cross-links in the network or that of the lamin A rods. In addition, the drastic stiffening of the differential elastic moduli on superposition of rotational and oscillatory shear stress reflect the increase in the stiffness of the laterally associated lamin A rods. These findings present a preliminary insight into distinct biomechanical properties of wild type lamin A protein and its mutants which in turn revealed interesting differences.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Discontinuous shear thickening in confined dilute carbon nanotube suspensions

Sayantan Majumdar; Rema Krishnaswamy; Aditya Sood

A monotonic decrease in viscosity with increasing shear stress is a known rheological response to shear flow in complex fluids in general and for flocculated suspensions in particular. Here we demonstrate a discontinuous shear-thickening transition on varying shear stress where the viscosity jumps sharply by four to six orders of magnitude in flocculated suspensions of multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWNT) at very low weight fractions (approximately 0.5%). Rheooptical observations reveal the shear-thickened state as a percolated structure of MWNT flocs spanning the system size. We present a dynamic phase diagram of the non-Brownian MWNT dispersions revealing a starting jammed state followed by shear-thinning and shear-thickened states. The present study further suggests that the shear-thickened state obtained as a function of shear stress is likely to be a generic feature of fractal clusters under flow, albeit under confinement. An understanding of the shear-thickening phenomena in confined geometries is pertinent for flow-controlled fabrication techniques in enhancing the mechanical strength and transport properties of thin films and wires of nanostructured composites as well as in lubrication issues.


Langmuir | 2008

Aggregation of a peptide antibiotic alamethicin at the air-water interface and its influence on the viscoelasticity of phospholipid monolayers.

Rema Krishnaswamy; Vikram Rathee; Aditya Sood

The aggregation properties of an antibiotic membrane-active peptide alamethicin at the air-water interface have been studied using interfacial rheology and fluorescence microscopy techniques. Fluorescence microscopy of alamethicin monolayers revealed a coexistence of liquid expanded (LE) and solid phases at the surface concentrations studied. Interfacial oscillatory shear measurements on alamethicin monolayers indicate that its viscoelastic properties are determined by the area fraction of the solid domains. The role of zwitterionic phospholipids dioleoylphosphatidyl choline (DOPC) and dioleoylphosphatidyl ethanolamine (DOPE) on the peptide aggregation behavior was also investigated. Fluorescence microscopy of alamethicin/phospholipid monolayers revealed an intermediate phase (I) in addition to the solid and LE phase. In mixed monolayers of phospholipid (L)/alamethicin (P), with increase in L/P, the monolayer transforms from a viscoelastic to a viscous fluid with the increase in area fraction of the intermediate phase. Further, a homogeneous mixing of alamethicin/lipid molecules is observed at L/P > 4. Our studies also confirm that the viscoelasticity of alamethicin/phospholipid monolayers is closely related to the alamethicin/phospholipid interactions at the air-water interface.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Reversible shear-induced crystallization above equilibrium freezing temperature in a lyotropic surfactant system

Vikram Rathee; Rema Krishnaswamy; Antara Pal; V. A. Raghunathan; Marianne Impéror-Clerc; B. Pansu; A. K. Sood

We demonstrate a unique shear-induced crystallization phenomenon above the equilibrium freezing temperature in weakly swollen isotropic and lamellar mesophases with bilayers formed in a cationic-anionic mixed surfactant system. Synchrotron rheological X-ray diffraction study reveals the crystallization transition to be reversible under shear (i.e., on stopping the shear, the nonequilibrium crystalline phase melts back to the equilibrium mesophase). This is different from the shear-driven crystallization below , which is irreversible. Rheological optical observations show that the growth of the crystalline phase occurs through a preordering of the phase to an phase induced by shear flow, before the nucleation of the phase. Shear diagram of the phase constructed in the parameter space of shear rate vs. temperature exhibits and transitions above the equilibrium crystallization temperature , in addition to the irreversible shear-driven nucleation of in the phase below . In addition to revealing a unique class of nonequilibrium phase transition, the present study urges a unique approach toward understanding shear-induced phenomena in concentrated mesophases of mixed amphiphilic systems.


Soft Matter | 2011

Shear banding in a yield stress bearing Langmuir monolayer

Sayantan Majumdar; Rema Krishnaswamy; A. K. Sood

We examine the shear-thinning behaviour of a two dimensional yield stress bearing monolayer of sorbitan tristearate at air/water interface. The flow curve consists of a linear region at low shear stresses/shear rates, followed by a stress plateau at higher values. The velocity profile obtained from particle imaging velocimetry indicates that shear banding occurs, showing coexistence of the fluidized region near the rotor and solid region with vanishing shear-rate away from the rotor. In the fluidized region, the velocity profile, which is linear at low shear rates, becomes exponential at the onset of shear-thinning, followed by a time varying velocity profile in the plateau region. At low values of constant applied shear rates, the viscosity of the film increases with time, thus showing aging behaviour like in soft glassy three-dimensional (3D) systems. Further, at the low values of the applied stress in the yield stress regime, the shear-rate fluctuations in time show both positive and negative values, similar to that observed in sheared 3D jammed systems. By carrying out a statistical analysis of these shear-rate fluctuations, we estimate the effective temperature of the soft glassy monolayer using the Galavatti-Cohen steady state fluctuation relation.


Pramana | 2003

Structures of some surfactant-polyelectrolyte complexes

Rema Krishnaswamy; V. A. Raghunathan; A. K. Sood

Structures of complexes formed in aqueous solutions by some anionic polyelectrolytes (double and single stranded (ds and ss) DNA, poly(vinyl sulfonate) (PVS), and poly(styrene sulfonate) (PSS)) with a cationic surfactant system consisting of cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) and sodium 3-hydroxy-2-naphthoate (SHN) have been determined using small angle X-ray diffraction. All complexes are found to have a two-dimensional (2-D) hexagonal structure at low SHN concentrations. Analysis of the diffraction data shows that the ds DNA—CTAB complex has an intercalated structure, with each DNA strand surrounded by three cylindrical micelles. On increasing SHN concentration, DNA—CTAB—SHN complexes exhibit a hexagonal-to-lamellar transition, whereas PVS complexes show a hexagonal → centered rectangular → lamellar transition. PSS complexes show yet another sequence of structures. These results indicate the significant influence of the chemical nature of the polyelectrolyte on the structure of the complexes.


Langmuir | 2007

Interfacial Rheology of an Ultrathin Nanocrystalline Film Formed at the Liquid/Liquid Interface

Rema Krishnaswamy; Sayantan Majumdar; Rajesh Ganapathy; Ved Varun Agarwal; A. K. Sood; C. N. R. Rao


EPL | 2003

Tuning the structure of surfactant complexes with DNA and other polyelectrolytes

Rema Krishnaswamy; Partha Mitra; V. A. Raghunathan; A. K. Sood

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A. K. Sood

Indian Institute of Science

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Sayantan Majumdar

Indian Institute of Science

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Vikram Rathee

Indian Institute of Science

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C. N. R. Rao

Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research

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Rajesh Ganapathy

Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research

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And A. K. Sood

Indian Institute of Science

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Avinanda Banerjee

Saha Institute of Nuclear Physics

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